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Evil eye in the western Highlands

Chapter 35: A PREVENTATIVE BY BURNING CLOTHING
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About This Book

A folkloric and anthropological study examines belief in the evil eye among Gaelic-speaking Highland communities, attributing it to natural jealousy and covetousness while noting how Christian teaching has shaped its expression. The author collects oral testimony and Gaelic examples that describe symptoms, social repercussions, and effects attributed to the glance, and provides extensive documentation of charms, preventive measures, diagnostic rites, cures, and theories of transmission alongside discussion of local variants and practice.

A PREVENTATIVE BY BURNING CLOTHING

Allusion has already been made, on an Islay authority, to the efficacy of burning a piece of the clothing to avert injury from any one bringing bad news (page 15). A Tiree reciter gives the same information a little more fully, and says it protects against witchcraft or the Evil Eye. “If any woman comes into a house who is suspected, those of the house should try to get a small piece of some article of her clothing, without letting her know that they have got it, and throw it on the fire; that will prevent her from taking anything away with her or leave any mischief when she goes away. If they cannot manage to get a bit of her own clothing, a good plan is, when she is leaving, to burn a rag of some kind of cloth in the fire and throw it after her as she goes.”

1 Corinthians, iii. 15. “If any man’s work shall be burnt, he shall suffer loss: but he himself shall be saved; yet so as by fire.”